The bottleneck already is finding anyone driving one, which is how criminals have operated before (so they know their targets security) in relation to car thefts.RvLeshrac said:This advance has made absolutely *NOTHING* better.BehattedWanderer said:HA! Oh, the penalty for our hubris, to think that advances make things better. And they do, in fairness, but they also make things better for thieves. Sucks to be BMW now, though. Word's out, this doesn't end well for them.
An electronic ignition system is even less reliable than a mechanical ignition system. The real question is how long it will take them to decode the algorithm BMW uses to generate IDs, at which point they won't even need to break the window - they'll just be able to unlock the doors, turn off the alarm, and drive away.
YES! Someone posted something similar, but this is the best.VoidWanderer said:Impressive, I am reminded of the demotivational poster mocking those stupid anti-piracy ads.
"You wouldn't download a car!"
No, but apparently I can download the key...
But the car that was stolen wasn't a 3 series - its an extremely rare 1 series M coupe, only a handful of which were sold in the UK.Vie said:"A recent model of an expensive BMW sedan has been stolen way more than the average sports car in the UK"
BMW sells more 3 series cars, usually base models, than Ford sells Mondeos in the UK.
They aren't a rare car, there is at least one on every street - they are way more common than other sports cars so its an ideal target for thieves to target.
Was it good?jdogtwodolla said:OOH! I wanna make a pun too!
I guess the price for that model was a... STEAL!
Yeah? that was good, right?